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The popularity of tulips rose and fell over the next 200 years. Hyacinths were more favored at times, and late-blooming tulips became more desired than early-blooming ones. Bybloemens (tulips with deep purple markings on a white ground) were favored by some growers, Bizarres (red or brownish black on yellow) or Roses (red or pink on white) by others. Still, every reader of Thackeray's 1837 novel Ravenswing knew what the author meant when he said one character was "a tulip among women, and the tulip fanciers all came flocking round."
Eventually, hobbyists wearied of debating the merits of tulips like "Daveyana" and "Miss Fanny Kemble." They grew tired of arguments about a bloom's most desirable shape. These squabbles, Pavord complains, reduced "the sublime, reckless, irrepressible, wayward, unpredictable, strange, subtle, generous, elegant English Florists' tulip to a geometrical equation." By 1885 the obsession with tulips had collapsed, and "the fabulous striped, feathered, and flamed flowers that had intrigued growers for centuries were cast aside."
Modern tulips, bright and cheerful, are extraordinarily popular. The Netherlands produces some three billion bulbs a year, in fields that cover, Pavord says, almost half the country. Selected for features like size, vigor and speed of growth, these flowers are the culmination of a 500-year history: no reader of Pavord will treat them dismissively again. But they also will long for a sight of those broken blossoms of the past, those beautiful flowers that drove men mad.
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